The spectrophotometer is the most common instrument in any laboratory. It measures how much light a sample absorbs at a given wavelength, which is proportional to the concentration of the absorbing species.
The Beer–Lambert Law
The fundamental relationship is:
A = ε × b × c
where A is absorbance (no units), ε is the molar absorptivity (L·mol⁻¹·cm⁻¹), b is the path length (cm), and c is the concentration (mol/L). The law holds for dilute solutions (typically A < 1.5). At higher concentrations, deviations occur due to molecular interactions and instrumental stray light.
Instrument Components
- Light source: deuterium lamp for UV (190–350 nm), tungsten-halogen lamp for visible (350–900 nm). Xenon flash lamps are used in some modern instruments.
- Monochromator: a grating or prism that selects a narrow band of wavelengths. The bandwidth affects measurement quality — narrower bandwidth gives better linearity.
- Sample compartment: holds the cuvette. Most instruments accept 1 cm pathlength cuvettes. Cuvettes are quartz (for UV) or glass/plastic (for visible only).
- Detector: a photomultiplier tube or photodiode that converts transmitted light to an electrical signal.
Operation Steps
- Turn on the instrument and allow the light source to warm up (15–30 minutes for deuterium lamps).
- Select the measurement wavelength.
- Fill a cuvette with the blank solution (the solvent without analyte).
- Place the blank in the sample holder and set the absorbance to zero (autozero).
- Measure the sample and record the absorbance.
- For multiple samples, re-zero with the blank periodically.
Cuvette Handling
Handle cuvettes by the frosted or ridged sides — fingerprints on the optical windows scatter light and increase absorbance. Rinse cuvettes with the sample solution before filling. Ensure no bubbles are in the light path.
Common Applications
- Nucleic acid quantification: A₂₆₀ measurement (1 OD₂₆₀ ≈ 50 µg/mL dsDNA, 40 µg/mL RNA, 33 µg/mL ssDNA). Purity assessed by the A₂₆₀/A₂₈₀ ratio (≈1.8 for pure DNA, ≈2.0 for pure RNA).
- Protein quantification: Bradford, BCA, and Lowry assays all use visible spectrophotometry.
- Enzyme kinetics: continuous monitoring of NADH consumption at 340 nm or product formation at a specific wavelength.
- Bacterial growth curves: turbidity measured at 600 nm (OD₆₀₀).
- Colorimetric chemical assays: almost any analyte can be measured if it reacts to form a colored product.